单词 | sustainer |
释义 | sustainern. I. In senses of sustain v. I. 1. a. A person, thing, or circumstance that helps maintain or promote a condition or state of affairs. ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > absence of change, changelessness > maintaining state or condition > [noun] > means of sustainera1325 maintenance1570 holding operation1962 the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > preservation from injury or destruction > [noun] > preservation in being or maintenance > that which foodOE breadc1175 sustainera1325 sustenance?a1430 maintainer1551 sustain1567 aliment?1608 alimony1626 a1325 Statutes of Realm (2011) xxvii. 87 Hose wole plainen him of conspirators, of sustenors of false plaintes, of meintenours for te habbe part þerof, ant of controuurs, bargainours, þat a ben bifore þe kinge to ansuuerien to þe plaintours þoru þis writ. ?1406 T. Hoccleve La Mâle Règle l. 284 in E. P. Hammond Eng. Verse between Chaucer & Surrey (1927) 64/1 Fals fauel, soustenour of vice. a1500 Acts Parl. Scotl. (1844) I. 112/2 Þat na chansler chawmerlane..na othir bailȝeis, clerkis [etc.]..sal be sustenaris na manteinaris of mutis or of querellys in þe kyngis court. 1569 E. Elviden Closet of Counsells f. 53v A tonge the whiche of wickednes doth babble out his fill: Is a sustayner of the lust, and norisher of will. 1600 W. Vaughan Golden-groue i. xxx. sig. G4 Temperance alone is the sustayner of ciuill quietnesse. 1608 G. Chapman Conspiracie Duke of Byron iii. i. 155 When I appear'd from battle, the whole sphere And full sustainer of the state we bear. a1786 J. Jebb Wks. (1787) II. 80 We would raise our hearts to the first and best of beings, the sustainer of our bliss, the source and fountain of our joy. 1819 P. B. Shelley Rosalind & Helen 20 The very hope of death's dear rest; Which, since the heart within my breast Of natural life was dispossest, It's strange sustainer there had been. 1833 E. Bulwer-Lytton Godolphin I. ix. 72 It is not always a sustainer of the stage delusion to have an actress for a mistress. 1911 Forum May 513 Work is the sustainer of hope. 2003 M. Rajawat Kashmir v. 109 Self-delusion as a sustainer of hope serves a purpose. b. A person who keeps others in a state of good health or well-being, or in good spirits; one who supports, encourages, or strengthens the spirits or resolution of another; (in later use) spec. God, as the support and guide of the believer. Also occasionally: a person who preserves an object in good condition. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > [noun] > that which or one who supports crutchc900 upholda1066 uptakinga1300 arma1382 postc1387 staff1390 sustainerc1390 undersetterc1400 potent?a1439 buttressa1450 supportalc1450 comfort1455 supporta1456 studa1500 poge1525 underpropper1532 shore1534 staya1542 prop1562 stoopa1572 underprop1579 sustentation1585 rest1590 underpinning1590 supportance1597 sustinent1603 lean1610 reliance1613 hingea1616 columna1620 spar1630 gable end1788 lifeboat1832 standback1915 the world > the supernatural > deity > Christian God > [noun] > according to other attributes horn of salvation (health)c825 fatherOE Our FatherOE leecha1200 searcher of (men's) heartsa1382 untempter1382 headstone of the cornerc1400 Valentinec1450 illuminator1485 sun?1521 righteous maker1535 shepherd1535 verity1535 strengthener1567 gracer1592 heart-searcher1618 heartbreaker1642 sustainera1680 philanthropist1730 the invisible1781 praise1782 All-Father1814 wisdom1855 omniscient1856 engracer1866 inbreather1873 God of the gaps1933 the great —— in the sky1968 c1390 in C. Horstmann Minor Poems Vernon MS (1892) i. 137 Heil susteynour of Seyntuarie. a1400 in K. W. Engeroff Untersuchung ‘Usages of Winchester’ (1914) 46 Principal sosteynere of þe fraunchyse. 1429–30 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VI (Electronic ed.) Parl. Sept. 1429 §62. m. 2 Þe seid inhabitauntz ben susteners and supportours of alle hem þat done contrarie to þe..gode governance made in þe saide staple. a1450 (c1412) T. Hoccleve De Regimine Principum (Harl. 4866) (1897) l. 2856 (MED) Honour, long lyfe..Mot haue oure sustenour, our prince & kyng! c1450 ( J. Walton tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. (Linc. Cathedral 103) 51 (MED) Þe senatoures..raþer schulde haue ben þy sustenoures. 1543 ( Chron. J. Hardyng (1812) 285 (MED) Of ryouters..Of peace breakers and all the susteynours That were with theim of preuy assocyates..all that were then founde culpable, Emprysoned were. ?1624 G. Chapman tr. Crowne Homers Wks. 151 Of Heauens golden Rodd The sole Sustainer. 1678 G. Mackenzie Laws & Customes Scotl. i. 210 By sustainers, are meant such as entertain the Thief at bed and board. a1680 S. Charnock Several Disc. Existence of God (1682) 709 God is the Lord of all, as he is the sustainer of all by his power. 1726 Bp. J. Butler 15 Serm. xiv. 288 When they shall have a Sensation, that He is the Sustainer of their Being, that they exist in him. a1832 Encycl. Metrop. (1845) II. 861/1 Almighty Creator and Sustainer of all things. 1866 J. G. Murphy Crit. Comm. Exodus xxii. 22 The decease of the father leaves both the widow and the child without their natural protector and sustainer. 1871 J. R. Macduff Memories of Patmos 161 Let us not dethrone and undeify the great Maker and Sustainer. 1964 F. Baldanza Ivy Compton-Burnett ii. 55 Patmore, the more than motherly sustainer of the Stace children. 2005 N. Douglas-Klotz Sufi Bk. of Life lviii We were asked, individually and collectively, ‘Am I not your sustainer, and the sustainer of all beings?’ c. A person who supports or upholds a cause, idea, argument, etc. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > easiness > aid, help, or assistance > support > support or encouragement > [noun] > supporter or encourager > specifically of a cause, principle, or practice sustainer?a1439 patron1466 favourer1542 urger1574 patriot1631 espouser1645 advocater1647 voucher1677 protagonist1880 a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) iii. l. 4663 (MED) This Epamynoda, of knihthod sustenour, Charboncle of vertu, [etc.]. c1475 (c1445) R. Pecock Donet (1921) 136 (MED) Ellis þe seid susteyners of moyses tablis..mowe not holde þat fals swering is forboden. 1558 (a1437) J. Lydgate Minor Poems (1934) ii. 811 (MED) Good Godfray of Bolyoune, Of knyghthod clepyd susteynoure. a1572 J. Knox Hist. Reformation Scotl. in Wks. (1848) II. 457 This conclusioun..I heard sustenit and concludit..in ane moist notabill auditour..The sustenar wes..Thomas de Finola. 1612 I. M. tr. Most Famous Hist. Meruine 256 I could perswade them to renounce their opinions, and become obedient sustainers of our Lawe. 1728 F. Hutcheson Ess. Passions i. i. 14 The Defences and Schemes commonly offered, can scarce free the Sustainers of this Cause from manifest Absurdity and Affectation. 1845 Addr. Rhode Island State Temperance Soc. 1844 11 Our friends and supporters, these inland sustainers of the cause. 1893 E. L. Gilmore Christ Church 94 Dr. Clap was from the first an active member, and in his Church were found..able sustainers of the cause. 1909 Q. Rev. Apr. 657 The aim of our politics can be no other than that the Bohemian people should again become the sustainers of the idea of the State. 2006 S. Pavone in Jesuits II iv. 58 Among the most implacable sustainers of the theory of global Jesuit conspiracy are such people as the bishop of Puebla. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > armed forces > the Army > group with special function or duty > [noun] > reinforcements succour?c1225 over-numbera1450 supplies1488 supplement1548 re-enforce1618 recrew1619 recruit1635 reinforcement1641 enforcement1643 reinforce1648 sustainer1708 re-enforcement1718 supporter1796 stiffening1900 1708 London Gaz. No. 4468/2 [They] had for the Attack on the Right 800 Grenadiers,..and for the Left 1600 Grenadiers, with the like number of Sustainers. 2. a. An object which holds another in place; a supporting structure; (in early use) esp. a supporting or weight-bearing part of the body. Now rare except as in sense 2b. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > that which supports staffc1000 hold1042 source1359 legc1380 shorer1393 stabilimenta1398 upholder1398 sustentationa1400 undersetterc1400 bearinga1425 undersettinga1425 suppowellc1430 triclinec1440 sustentaclec1451 supportera1475 sustainerc1475 sustenal1483 stayc1515 buttress1535 underpinning1538 firmament1554 countenance1565 support1570 appuia1573 comfort1577 hypostasis1577 underpropping1586 porter1591 supportation1593 supportance1597 understaya1603 bearer1607 rest1609 upsetter1628 mountinga1630 sustent1664 underlay1683 holdfast1706 abutment1727 suppeditor1728 mount1739 monture1746 bed1793 appoggiatura1833 bracing1849 bench1850 under-pinner1859 bolster-piece1860 sustainer1873 table mount1923 c1475 ( Surg. Treat. in MS Wellcome 564 f. 30v (MED) Þe hool boon schulde be a susteynour of þe broken. c1475 tr. C. de Pisan Livre du Corps de Policie (Cambr.) (1977) 165 The laste parties of the bodye..be the sustenours and ber the charge of all the surplus of the said bodye. 1663 N. Culpeper & A. Cole tr. T. Bartholin Anat. (new ed.) i. xxii. 56 They have on each side one Muscle..called Cremasteres or Suspensores, hangers or sustainers, for they hold up the Stones. 1675 J. Howe Living Temple 67 The back Bone is composed of so many joynts (twenty four, besides those of that which is the basis and sustainer of the whole). 1706 tr. L. Verduc Manner curing Fractures xlix. 186 in tr. A. Belloste Hosp. Surgeon (ed. 2) The Bone that sustains the great Toe, may be dislocated..and the Sustainer of the little Toe is expos'd to the same hazard. 1765 A. Wilson Short Remarks Autumnal Disorders Bowels 56 They reciprocally act as the supporters of each other: the bones being the passive sustainers of the whole frame. 1816 New Monthly Mag. Apr. 223/1 Gravity..is never found steady to any defined law; but when a body is at rest on some base, pendant from some sustainer, or falling perpendicularly to some point of the earth below it. 1893 Westm. Gaz. 25 Apr. 7/3 The weight of the carriage was 60lb., of the engine 200lb., and of the grating of sustainers 70lb. b. Candle-making. A device, typically a small metal disc, used to maintain the wick of a candle, esp. a night light, in an upright position when the wax is liquid. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > [noun] > that which supports staffc1000 hold1042 source1359 legc1380 shorer1393 stabilimenta1398 upholder1398 sustentationa1400 undersetterc1400 bearinga1425 undersettinga1425 suppowellc1430 triclinec1440 sustentaclec1451 supportera1475 sustainerc1475 sustenal1483 stayc1515 buttress1535 underpinning1538 firmament1554 countenance1565 support1570 appuia1573 comfort1577 hypostasis1577 underpropping1586 porter1591 supportation1593 supportance1597 understaya1603 bearer1607 rest1609 upsetter1628 mountinga1630 sustent1664 underlay1683 holdfast1706 abutment1727 suppeditor1728 mount1739 monture1746 bed1793 appoggiatura1833 bracing1849 bench1850 under-pinner1859 bolster-piece1860 sustainer1873 table mount1923 1873 Patent No. 13,795 in Patents for Inventions: Abridgem. Specif. Oils, Fats, Lubricants, Candles, & Soap (ed. 2) 218 There is a wick sustainer. 1892 Eng. Illustr. Mag. 9 711 In one case a wick and metal sustainer has to be first placed; the material is then poured in; this is done with a dexterity that is remarkable. 1940 School Sci. Rev. 22 139 The wick..is anchored to the bottom of the cup by means of sealing-wax, and a metal sustainer is placed between the nightlight mortar and the cup. 1999 S. Lea Encycl. Candle Making Techniques 26 Place the sustainer and wick centrally in the container. 3. a. A structure or apparatus allowing flight to be sustained; (Aeronautics) a structure forming a lifting surface of an aircraft; = aeroplane n. 1. Now rare. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > a means of conveyance through the air > aeroplane > parts of aircraft > [noun] > plane or aerofoil sail1808 plane1809 deck1843 surface1843 aeroplane1866 aerocurve1894 airplane1896 aerofoil1907 sustainer1908 airfoil1922 1867 Jrnl. Med. Sci., Lit., & Crit. 30 Mar. 349/2 This machine should be constructed..so as to act mechanically as the sustainers and gliders of the wings of sailing and gliding birds. 1895 Trans. Liverpool Engin. Soc. 16 12 The sustainer, which has the appearance of a large Venetian blind, consists of wooden blades, each 19 feet long, in a steel frame, giving a total area of 140 square feet. 1908 Aëronaut. Jrnl. July 56/2 The sustainer was fixed to the car by wire guys, care being taken to have the frame truly vertical. 1911 R. M. Pierce Dict. Aviation 113 Glider.., an appendage or structure which enables an insect to glide thru the air: as, elytra used as sustainers and gliders in flight. 1969 K. Munson Pioneer Aircraft 1903–14 154/1 A rectangular frame with..fifty of Phillips' aerofoil ‘sustainers’ mounted horizontally. b. Astronautics. An auxiliary engine that sustains the movement of a rocket or missile after the boosters have burnt out; the stage that contains such an engine. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > a means of conveyance through the air > spacecraft > rocket > [noun] > types of rocket engine retro-rocket1951 sustainer1951 vernier1958 retro-engine1960 posigrade rocket1961 retro1961 thruster1962 strap-on1966 1951 F. Gaynor New Mil. & Naval Dict. 247 Sustainer, a propulsion system which travels with, and does not separate from, the missile. 1962 J. Glenn in J. Glenn et al. Into Orbit 138 At lift-off, all three of the Atlas's engines would be operating—the sustainer engine and the two outboard engines. 1996 Jane's Def. Weekly 7 Feb. 28/2 Designated the AS-17 ‘Krypton’ by NATO, the Kh-31 uses a rocket engine followed by a ramjet sustainer. 2009 B. Evans Escaping Bonds Earth 158 Five minutes into the flight, the Atlas' sustainer shut down and Sigma 7 cleanly separated from the rocket. 4. A person who sustains or suffers an injury, or endures an affliction. Obsolete. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > [noun] > sufferer patientc1400 feeler1435 suffererc1450 sustainer1533 endurera1599 1533–4 in J. M. Webster & A. A. M. Duncan Regality of Dunfermline Court Bk. (1953) 106 Gif ony of thaim dois in the contray it sall be lesum to the sustenar of the skatht heyr of the first falt forgevyng. 1574 T. Tymme tr. J. de Serres Three Partes Comm. Ciuill Warres Fraunce 150 The singuler loue & care that I haue for the Kinges maiestie and dignitie, wyll not suffer me, not to accounte my selfe a partaker and sustainer of that wound. ?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads xxiii. 524 Thy selfe, hast a sustainer bene Of much affliction in my cause. 1640 A. Stafford Honour & Vertue 51 The griefe of the sustainer is doubled by the indignity of the Afflictor. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2012; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.a1325 |
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